tv Headliners GB News August 24, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST
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was since the early 19905, he was a man with since the early 1990s, he was a man with a complex destiny and he made serious mistakes in life i >> -- >> he achieved the results. he needed both for himself and when i asked him for the common cause, as in these last months, he was a talented person, a talented businessman . when he talented businessman. when he worked not only in our country and worked with results , but and worked with results, but also abroad in africa in particular. gb news understands the government is looking to block the former natwest chief executive's multi—million pound payout. >> dame alison rose quit after it emerged. she talked about nigel farage, his finances to a journalist , nigel farage, his finances to a journalist, but her actions are being independo investigated . being independo investigated. donald trump is due to surrender himself on charges of trying to overturn the result of the 2020 presidential election in georgia. these are earlier pictures of the trump convoy leaving new jersey to head to the fulton county jail in
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georgia . he's facing dozens of georgia. he's facing dozens of criminal charges and will go on trial several times in the next 18 months. meanwhile all 38 year old vivek ramos swamy dominated the first republican president debate last night in an exclusive interview with gb news, mr ramaswami says america needs a patriot who speaks the truth. >> i can only reunite this country if i'm doing it from the white house as the leader and the face of our movement. and what i will tell president trump is know you're a patriot. is i know you're a patriot. i mean, he and i have a deep relationship with mutual respect. i want him as my most valued adviser, something of a mentor in that role. actually, i've got fresh legs. i'm less than half his age. >> you're the rookie. >> you're the rookie. >> i'm. and i wear it as a badge of honour . >> i'm. and i wear it as a badge of honour. but we have to reach young people who have lost their sense pride this sense of national pride in this country . country. >> the duchess sussex will >> the duchess of sussex will reportedly join her husband at the invictus games in dusseldorf in germany next month . prince
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in germany next month. prince harry will be in attendance throughout the entirety of the games . but before they get games. but before they get underway , the duke will travel underway, the duke will travel to the uk to attend a charity award ceremony on the eve of the first anniversary of the late queen's death . and finally, an queen's death. and finally, an 11 year old boy from northumberland took his maths gcse five years early and has now achieved the highest grade, a nine equivalent to an a star. harry hugh, who took the exam in year six at bede academy in blyth, says his performance was quite good . his mum says he's quite good. his mum says he's always loved puzzles, numbers and logic make impressive stuff. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's time for headliners .
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time for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners the paper preview show with a difference . it's got show with a difference. it's got three comedians taking you through the next day's newspapers and one of the comedians. >> i'm leo carson. i'm joined tonight by the robson and jerome of uk comedy francis foster and bruce devlin . how you both doing 7 .7 >> 7- >> i'm ? >> i'm fairly depressed after that. >> i'm taking it as a compliment i >> -- >> are you okay? fine. i will as well then. my apologies. >> you're just back from the edinburgh fringe. >> am ? yeah. how was it for >> i am? yeah. how was it for you? i'm fine. yeah, it was okay. no, a bizarre thing happened last night, but i don't think i can. actually, i was telling earlier, don't telling you earlier, but i don't think i can. bodily fluids. yes. >> anyway , let's move and >> anyway, let's move on and have front pages have a look at the front pages of newspapers . the of tomorrow's newspapers. the daily mail leads with putin's chilling taunt over his rival's mistake. the sun has with deepest sympathy. so sorry i killed him. the guardian leads with us. bomb likely cause of prigozhin crash . the express has
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prigozhin crash. the express has vast £4 billion spend on asylum is unacceptable. the i news has bomb blew up putin critics jet and finally the daily star goes different with the curse of the spooky child and those were your front pages . and let's have a front pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages , starting with the sun. francis, what have they got? well, they've with the well, they've gone with the story of the tragic death of yevgeny prigozhin . nobody yevgeny prigozhin. nobody understands or knows what actually happened , least of all actually happened, least of all vladimir putin. and nobody knows how he died. i'm pretty sure the one person who does know how he died is vladimir putin. well this is the thing. i mean, when look, the reality was the moment prigozhin started that coup against putin, his days were numbered . and especially as numbered. and especially as someone very famously said, if you're going to come for the
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king, you best not miss. yeah. and what's even worse is if you're going to come for the king and then halfway through, bottle it and then go, oh, no, i'm really sorry. oh yeah, you're going to die even quicker . yeah, that's what's down. he got talked out of it. yeah. and was obviously given all these assurances like, no, go assurances like, no, you can go live belarus, be safe, live in belarus, you'll be safe, you wagner you can keep your wagner military group, you can keep your gold mines and all your interest in africa . yeah, we interest in africa. yeah, we won't. we won't kill you. just as long you call off the as long as you call off the coup.i as long as you call off the coup. i mean, that was ever coup. i mean, that was only ever going to months. and it going to last two months. and it was exactly two months. it was almost symbolic almost like a symbolic, symbolic gesture to do two months to gesture to do it two months to the like a calling the day. well like a calling card. yeah, right. >> then i've just got >> yeah. but then i've just got the wagner bit because i was thinking that's why i understand all the memes of the guy from the factor right? they've the x factor now. right? they've had a resurgence. they are, yes , they are. >> i just like to know they are different people. >> yes . no, i different people. >> yes. no, i realise that different people. >> yes . no, i realise that now. >> yes. no, i realise that now. yeah >>i yeah >> i mean, it would be brilliant if wagner was leading the wagner
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group. they need a leader group. well, they need a leader now, maybe , you know, it now, so maybe, you know, it would sense. they wouldn't now, so maybe, you know, it woul(to sense. they wouldn't now, so maybe, you know, it woul(to change|se. they wouldn't now, so maybe, you know, it woul(to change the they wouldn't now, so maybe, you know, it woul(to change the brand.ouldn't need to change the brand. >> no, they wouldn't need to change of that. change the font or any of that. yeah, absolutely. the pr done. >> yeah, that would sense. >> yeah, that would make sense. i never seem to i mean, gangsters never seem to realise in danger realise when they're in danger and is gangster and russia really is a gangster state. francis isn't it? oh, of course. it's gangster state. course. it's a gangster state. and one person and there's only one person who's , and is who's in charge, and that is vladimir putin. and you would think that people would understand how it works . understand that how it works. and if you and if you dare to challenge him, there's only going to be one thing that happens to you. but these people never seem to learn so many times and times he's reached out and killed even in killed people, not even in russia. in russia. he's killed people in the uk. litvinenko berezovsky , the uk. litvinenko berezovsky, which is written up as a suicide . but it's pretty obvious it wasn't, you know, it's so it's i mean, it's obviously awful, but it's well. look at it's funny as well. you look at all oligarchs fell from all of these oligarchs fell from balcony window. yeah yeah. drowned in the sea. yeah shot shot himself three times in the head with his hands tied behind his back. it's all suicides like that. and then climbed into a
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bag after he was dead and zipped it up. and what do you think it's to the war it's going to mean for the war in do you think this in ukraine? do you think this is going to help ukraine or is actually strength for actually a show of strength for putin actually putin that could could actually prigozhin if we could prigozhin prigozhin if we could pronounce him like, you know, posh mom's posh pronouncing cerrito, but prigozhin is popular or was popular with the with the troops on the ground. well, i think that this is a very canny move by putin because what this has demonstrated is that he's in control. he's in charge. if you come and challenge him or if you try and undermine him, this is what will happen to you. and i think putin is now in a stronger position than ever. and actually, russia are actually doing pretty well in the war as well. they're not doing badly. well, i disagree on that. i think it's a it's an attritional war. so, i mean, the counteroffensive is going to take but it's really take time, but it's really paying take time, but it's really paying has paying off like ukraine has taken or however you taken robertino or however you pronounce it, and they're breaking through the first line of proper russian defences. so i
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think i think this this is just my personal opinion. i think there could be a mad rush to the, to the sea and cut off that land bridge to crimea. but that's, you know , that's just that's, you know, that's just that's, you know, that's just that's just my prediction anyway , moving on to the guardian now, bruce, with a story about the north—south divide , something north—south divide, something that all too well . that we know all too well. >> well, that's that's true. so what is basically happening is gcse results. apparently, there's huge disparity in the there's a huge disparity in the north and there is in the south. and people. but one person to have bucked that is the nine year old who took his maths gcse in blyth five years early . the in blyth five years early. the little boy, i can't remember his name, of course, with the life expectancy being lower in scotland , you do have to rush to scotland, you do have to rush to your exams quicker. well, that's. did you pass your exams in scotland? some of them, yeah. because only standard because i've only got standard grade and music. latin? grade latin and music. latin? yeah >> did that come in handy in edinburgh ? edinburgh? >> i'm the reason i took it was to get off. right. because i
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didn't like it because i was bullied. insert violins. didn't like it because i was bullied. insert violins . right. bullied. insert violins. right. ehm, but yeah. no, that was the only reason i took it. and yeah, i'm surprised i passed it. yeah. >> and what do you of this? >> and what do you make of this? nonh >> and what do you make of this? north south divide? because they're a, you they're selling it as a, you know, a london centric policies are causing this this divide . are causing this this divide. but is it just isn't it just that the further north you go, the thicker people get as you and i prove, but maybe that's but then we're from a different country . country. >> i m- m— m a lot of people >> so i know a lot of people think is the north, but think scotland is the north, but it's it's a different country. >> i just count it as northern britain. >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton are apparently they're >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton eto apparently they're >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton {to do jarently they're >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton {to do itrently they're >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton {to do it likey they're >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton {to do it like whatr're >> do you. yeah. right. okay but eton {to do it like what the ivy going to do it like what the ivy has done and kind franchise has done and kind of franchise some stuff out. so some of their stuff out. so you're to have regional you're going to have regional eton's but eton's right not eating but eton. yeah. yeah >> i think actually what this shows is in many ways a poverty of ambition, particularly in places in the north where you have communities who've been hollowed out by globalisation . hollowed out by globalisation. the fact that they used to be a lot of industry in these in these communities and that now
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no longer exists. and as a result of that , there's a result of that, there's a there's a sense of hopelessness in these places where kids will think, well, even if i do get high grades, even if i do work hard, there's no jobs anyway. so what's the point? remember what's the point? i remember when working in cornwall, when i was working in cornwall, there attitude because is there was an attitude because is there's no jobs anyway, so why would you work hard? why would you study? there's no examples of people who've actually gone on and achieved things because even if you do quite well , even if you do quite well, you've got to leave the county and then once you leave the county, you're not an example anymore, right? yeah. and i guess you get winnowing out guess you get that winnowing out that brain drain from from provinces towards big cities like manchester and glasgow and london as well. anyway, moving on, what does the express have in the front cover? francis well , has with , the express has gone with a £4.4 billion spend on asylum. is unacceptable and the reality is we are spending an astronomic amount on the asylum system and it's simply not fit for purpose.
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so i'm going to read out some stats. the cost of the asylum system ballooned . to 3.996 system ballooned. to 3.996 billion from 2.11 billion in a year. billion from 2.11 billion in a year . it's basically doubled. year. it's basically doubled. it's basically doubled. and we're not talking about millions. we're talking about billions. yeah and we constantly seem to be talking about it. and nothing seems to be done. and people are frustrated and understandably so, because then they're not seeing any improvement. if anything, it's getting worse. and all we're heanng getting worse. and all we're hearing is rhetoric about stop the boats, put the boats on being stopped. so what's going on? well later on, we're going to about story to be talking about a story where ngos are where charities and ngos are actually unethically. actually behaving unethically. according to the home secretary. and helping migrants gain the system. and also, you know, just giving giving wrong advice, giving giving wrong advice, giving almost unlawful advice to help them , you know, use the help them, you know, use the asylum system to stay in the country when it's not really designed for economic migrants. it's designed for people who are
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fleeing genuine war zones. it's designed for people who are fleeing genuine war zones . okay. fleeing genuine war zones. okay. we'll move on. and we finally got the daily star. bruce, what have they got in the front cover ? >> 7- >> no, this 7— >> no, this is hm ? >> no, this is very serious. it's a curse of the spooky child . so a charity shop painting of a girl with returned time and time again because buyers can't cope with her spooky stare. my point would be, i don't know if this is true or not. it could be the fact there's just more than one in circulation and someone's just at it. but then maybe. then just at it. but then maybe. then just don't go and buy filth from charity shops. >> what do you think? do you think this is actually going to cause people to rush out and buy this no no, because this painting? no no, because people say it's very, very upsetting because child, the upsetting because the child, the way the child looks, because the face is a bit like skew. well yeah. >> and has an imperious kind of very piercing look. >> well you're being judged . >> well you're being judged. yes. there's some people like that. yes. there's some people like that . oh yeah, of course they that. oh yeah, of course they do. i mean and i quite like how he's got like a sort of like the
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rock you know, when, how you the rock used to lift his eyebrow. it's a girl. it's a girl. i'm age 22. 23. i don't see gender, mate. just you can mate. look, it's just you can see it. it's got, like the little eyebrow right there. little eyebrow right up there. so quite charismatic kid is so it's quite charismatic kid is what i'm saying. yeah. so you're going to wait for the reprint anyway. that's it for part one. but coming arrests over anyway. that's it for part one. but crooked arrests over anyway. that's it for part one. but crooked house arrests over anyway. that's it for part one. but crooked house fire,ests over the crooked house fire, unethical charities and sadiq calls us all. see you
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wasted on asylum crisis . welcome wasted on asylum crisis. welcome back to headliners. >> i'm leo pearson. i'm still here with frances foster and bruce devlin. anyway cracking on with the mirror. now with a scale of the migrant crisis reaching a apocalyptic levels, frances well, and yes, indeed. i mean , i'm just going to take you mean, i'm just going to take you through a couple of just the stats . here. there's 175,000 stats. here. there's 175,000 people for 157 waiting for an initial decision on an application for 84% rise from .
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application for 84% rise from. 122,000 earlier this year. that's 175,000 people just in limbo. it'sjust that's 175,000 people just in limbo. it's just completely nuts . and the amount of money that we're spending, 3.9, 7 billion. at what point are we going to sort this out at what point is somebody going to step in? and actually, if implement something, that means that we're going to begin to solve this problem? well, the trouble with the system at moment is the the system at the moment is the asylum just basically asylum system just basically approves everybody because everybody knows how to how to game can i'm game the system. you can see i'm christian, i'm lgbtq. i can't be sent back. you know, you tear up your passport, then you say, i'm from i'm from syria, i'm from wherever . so. so you can't, wherever. so. so you can't, can't be they can't send send you because don't even can't be they can't send send you where cause don't even can't be they can't send send you where youe don't even can't be they can't send send you where you where don't even can't be they can't send send you where you where you'rezven know where you where you're coming but you know, you coming from. but you know, you know what buttons press to know what buttons to press to get into system, even get into the system, even though, you just you though, you know, you just you want an economic migrant. want to be an economic migrant. so majority get so the vast majority get approved. many approved. but because so many are approved and it's not
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are being approved and it's not disincentivized more people from making that crossing and at some point we've got to grasp the nettle and actually do something to stop people making these risky journeys . and for all risky journeys. and for all that, people they're that, people say they're the most, , sort of most, you know, sort of impoverished or are the most vulnerable, you know, talk orchard and all the rest of it. and the ones that make it all the way to the uk are the ones who can pay people traffickers, thousands and thousands of pounds them here. so pounds to bring them here. so you know, definition, you know, by by definition, they're not the most need. they're not the most in need. and it's a real shame that our foreign aid budget is what's being on this. so we're being spent on this. so we're actually a dividend actually getting a dividend instead a foreign instead of spending a foreign aid overseas, we're aid budget overseas, we're spending this country. so spending it in this country. so we're actually britain's probably coming on top even probably coming out on top even though looks though it looks like a ridiculous amount money. ridiculous amount of money. we're out we're probably doing better out of were spending of this than if we were spending the budget where it the foreign aid budget where it would there you would do more good. there you go. i mean, the problem is as well is that the way we talk about it, these people are illegal immigrants. it's illegal. they're breaking the law. yeah so there are people
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who are trying to get to this country, to this country by legal means . and they legal means. and they essentially have been at the back at the back of the queue because people are kind of cute and we're accepting that and we're saying that it's fine and it's there's one thing we it's and if there's one thing we won't accept in uk, won't accept in the uk, is somebody jumping yeah somebody jumping a queue? yeah exactly. should tutting exactly. we should start tutting . yeah, maybe that's how we could this crisis. could solve this. this crisis. start people jumping on start tutting people jumping on british. yeah. yeah it is. yes. yeah.i british. yeah. yeah it is. yes. yeah. i surely the first yeah. i mean, surely the first rule of becoming british is you learn queue exactly what we learn to queue exactly what we should is we should be at the should do is we should be at the beach and the moment these people we just look people come over, we just look at then just give at them tut and then just give a passive aggressive comment. anyway we've got the telegraph now with claims that the migrant crisis being worse by crisis is being made worse by charities unethically . charities behaving unethically. >> bruce yes, so this is suella saying that some charities are politically motivated activists masquerading as humanity , masquerading as humanity, koreans in particular. she's taking a pop at claire moseley , taking a pop at claire moseley, who was the founder of care for
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carly. she's no longer a trustee of that charity due to, i think, financial and appropriation, inappropriate payments . yeah, it inappropriate payments. yeah, it described payments of £340,000 from the charity into her personal account . yeah. now, personal account. yeah. now, it's interesting because she was overin it's interesting because she was over in belgium . she. she sounds over in belgium. she. she sounds quite a character. i wasn't familiar, but she was wandering around with pepper spray in belgium, which. so maybe that's what she was spending some of the 340 k on. i mean , have you the 340 k on. i mean, have you been to belgium? >> probably idea >> probably not a bad idea because does she because i mean, why does she need pepper? i don't know. because belgians, mate. need pepper? i don't know. becbute belgians, mate. need pepper? i don't know. bec but then belgians, mate. need pepper? i don't know. becbut then anotherians, mate. need pepper? i don't know. bec but then another thing,1ate. need pepper? i don't know. becbut then another thing, she. >> but then another thing, she was she threatened a volunteer. i shouldn't laugh at this , but i shouldn't laugh at this, but she started she threatened a volunteer by saying, i'm going to drag you out by your hair. and i was like, oh, my goodness . because i looked at her hair and the first thing i thought was, looks dry. was, that looks quite dry. so i don't know she had hair. don't know if she had hair. jealousy , you know, jealousy from, you know, whatever. but did it remind you of scotland , that little phrase, of scotland, that little phrase, bruce what dry hair?
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>> i'm going to dry drag you out by your most business meetings end in scotland. >> yeah, i think that's kind of parental love, it ? if you parental love, isn't it? if you don't get up and get ready for school or draghi out by the hair. >> yeah. there's £340,000 that was paid from the charity into her personal account. swears her personal account. she swears it's ted . she says her personal account. she swears it's just ted . she says her personal account. she swears it's just restingi . she says her personal account. she swears it's just resting in she says her personal account. she swears it's just resting in her says it was just resting in her account. it was some to save a little bit of money on transfer fees, £3,000 on transfer. >> so i think there's a disparity. yeah it doesn't make much sense to me to be perfectly honest with you. but i think it is kind of tit for tat because as suella doesn't like her, because claire doesn't like suella rwanda project. so i think that's where a lot of this has come from. yeah these charities are working against the government and they're not behaving ethically. >> not in the >> they're not behaving in the best the people >> they're not behaving in the best supposedthe people >> they're not behaving in the best supposedthebeeople >> they're not behaving in the best supposedthebe helping they're supposed to be helping because they're supposed to be making people safe making sure that people are safe and encouraging people making sure that people are safe anmake encouraging people making sure that people are safe anmake ejourneying people making sure that people are safe an make ejourney ,|g people making sure that people are safe an make ejourney , which, le making sure that people are safe an make ejourney , which, as to make this journey, which, as we've past few we've seen in the past few weeks, have died trying weeks, people have died trying to cross the channel this to cross the channel well, this is problem where people are is a problem where people are so married ideals erg that they
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married to ideals erg that they don't actually see the reality of the situation . caution you of the situation. caution you should not be encouraging any single person to get into a dinghy to try to get to this country, because if these people die, which some of them do on this journey, that is your fault. yeah, that is your fault. and you need to take responsibility for that. yeah. so these charities have blood on their anyway , the meal their hands anyway, the meal now. khan says that now. and sadiq khan says that anyone his ulez anyone who doesn't like his ulez expansion is a covid denying conspiracy theorist, or maybe they just don't like being shaken for down money for no apparent reason. france well, our mayor, who is an absolute top level legend, said that top level legend, has said that if you disagree with the ulez, then you are you know, you are a conspiracy theorist, you're an anti—vaxxer , you're a, you're anti—vaxxer, you're a, you're a covid denier. you're an anti—semite . you're you're anti—semite. you're you're probably transphobic as well. all of this and it's just unbelievable that our mayor, the mayor of this city, when people
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criticise a very divisive policy which ulez is ulez is a policy thatis which ulez is ulez is a policy that is going to be rolled out across this country or across this city and across the country as well . they're doing it in as well. they're doing it in other cities and it's expanding into the suburbs of those cities as well. absolutely. integrate london. this is happening when we have a cost of living crisis , when people when people's mortgages and rents are going through the roof, when their bills are through the bills are going through the roof, the inflation is roof, when the inflation is through the roof , food prices through the roof, food prices should go , what are you doing? should go, what are you doing? but it's also completely scientifically unnecessary . scientifically unnecessary. marie because i mean it makes sense in the centre of a town where you've got congestion and you've the you've got pollution, but in the suburbs they're leafy. there's a lot space between the cars lot more space between the cars and we're all moving to and also we're all moving to electric cars the next electric cars over the next decade there isn't decade anyway. so there isn't going be there aren't going to be any there aren't going to be any there aren't going emissions on the going to be emissions on the roads. so the whole thing is ridiculous . and i mean, this ridiculous. and i mean, this this idea that everybody that opposes the ulez scheme is an
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anti—vaxxer, covid denier conspiracy theorist and. i mean, in my case, it's a lucky guess, but i think for most people there completely, you know, completely separate issues. >> well, i mean >> yeah, well, i mean that's a bit saying those bit similar saying for those that for brexit that they that voted for brexit that they were or this, and were racist or this, that and the next thing, it's a kind of homogenised in glasgow. homogenised thing in glasgow. they have tried to roll out the ulez, but unfortunately i think it was 600 of the council's vehicles didn't pass the test. but that's a bit like i remember with the cop26 thing that they had delegates at gleneagles, which is a really, really posh hotel, and they had a fleet of teslas for them, but they didn't have charging points because they're not great infrastructure as is back up the road. and they had to get a diesel generator in which to power the car. so it kind of drove the diesel generator. >> they had a truck dragging a diesel generator along behind the electric vehicles. yes. >> with joe biden on top of it and his entourage . so don't tell greta. >> absolute madness. anyway, we've got the express now with a leaked apology over prince
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andrew, although it's not the worst prince andrew's worst leaked prince andrew's been associated with bruce. >> think does >> well, i don't think he does leak. condition, leak. he has a rare condition, which means he can't admit anything his armpits, ehm, anything from his armpits, ehm, or anyone else. so yeah, this is priti patel has apologised to the king and because she had intervened, she's trying to get the £3 million security back for prince andrew. and a lot of people are saying, well, hang on, why does this guy need £3 million? because as far as we know, he has his pizzas delivered doesn't leave the delivered and doesn't leave the house. yeah , she's she's very house. so yeah, she's she's very embarrassed . yeah. embarrassed. yeah. >> and it's a whack of money. £3 million. £3 million. the thing that i'm thinking about is what is going through pretty patel's mind, you know, you're not the most popular person. you're quite frankly an atrocious home secretary. oh, she's great. yeah what do you think is going to make you more loved by the british people? know what british people? do you know what prince that's the one prince andrew? that's the one who's going to get me back into the that's the the mainstream. that's the that's the person am going to
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that's the person i am going to back so that i can become a relevant political figure again. absolutely insane, mate. he's he's always been proved innocent, though. i think we've got to remember that just like kevin spacey oj anyway, they kevin spacey and oj anyway, they i know and development in the i know and a development in the crooked house fire saga is two men are arrested blimey hope their insurance covers prison tuckshop purchases francis well yes . so police have said that yes. so police have said that a 66 year old man from dudley and a 33 year old man from milton keynes have been arrested over the blaze at the 18th century pub. now, this is a beloved pub in staffordshire, which is known as the wonkiest pub. it was built in the 18th century, a historic building . it was bought historic building. it was bought by a private buyer and then i think something like two days later, it kind of burned to the ground. yeah. and then. and then. and it was on a day that they'd booked band to play who they'd booked a band to play who were like we like burning were called like we like burning pubs down or gasoline and matches or something like that. and they'd booked and they'd already pre booked like as well and
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like bulldozers as well and going, mate, you know, if you're going, mate, you know, if you're going to do an arson scam , going to do an arson scam, allegedly, well , you can't. allegedly, well, you can't. whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. well, okay. but okay. it's a little bit far. but if you you know , bit far. but if you you know, maybe do something that isn't as you know , it's dodgy. yeah. and you know, it's dodgy. yeah. and you know, it's dodgy. yeah. and you did see if there's no obviously this is a, you know, this is a case that's going to going to go to trial by the looks of it. so we don't want to prejudice the case. >> no, i don't think we should ehhen >> no, i don't think we should either. the private either. but the private developer did buy which to developer did buy in which to demolish it, didn't he? apparently or didn't they? sorry, i don't know . sorry, i don't know. >> i mean, they certainly did demolish after it was burnt demolish it after it was burnt down. they in without down. yeah, they went in without without in without permission. they went in and knocked down because i think, you know, it's a it's a site special cultural site of special cultural heritage . heritage. >> yes. >> yes. >> so, you know , you can't just >> so, you know, you can't just go in and knock it down. it's >> so, you know, you can't just go iithe d knock it down. it's >> so, you know, you can't just go iithe leaning it down. it's >> so, you know, you can't just go iithe leaning it dow ofit's >> so, you know, you can't just go iithe leaning it dow of pisa. like the leaning tower of pisa. but and but they they did. and now there's huge campaign to get there's a huge campaign to get it rebuilt in the original state and not remove the bricks from the and all the rest of it the site and all the rest of it for the subside. ince yeah, for with the subside. ince yeah, i think i they want to
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i think i think they want to recreate it. >> right. okay enough. >> right. okay fair enough. >> right. okay fair enough. >> if you >> which i don't know if you even how are you going to >> which i don't know if you eve a how are you going to >> which i don't know if you eve a spirit)w are you going to >> which i don't know if you eve a spirit levels you going to >> which i don't know if you eve a spirit levels you goes; to get a spirit level that goes sideways? dunno. get a british sideways? i dunno. get a british builder in. sideways? i dunno. get a british bui i'd' in.with the charity shop. >> i'd go with the charity shop. yeah. it for part two. but >> that's it for part two. but coming got serial coming up we've got serial killers getting accounts , killers getting bank accounts, sexism in nhs and a tribunal sexism in the nhs and a tribunal rules that are common. insult is transphobic. find out which one after the weather . after the weather. >> that warm feeling inside made from boxt boilers is proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> evening. i'm alex deakin . >> evening. i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news a mixture of sunshine and showers to come on friday and showers to come on friday and a cooler feel for many, particularly across east anglia in south—east where it's in the south—east where it's been warm humid today been quite warm and humid today and we've a few and we've seen a few thunderstorms result . but thunderstorms as a result. but this pressure sitting across this low pressure sitting across northern still northern scotland is still providing some heavy showers here they'll keep going here and they'll keep going through night. any of through the night. any of those showers still across the showers still left across the south—east fading away now. south—east are fading away now. so england and wales so much of england and wales
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will dry overnight will become dry overnight and it will become dry overnight and it will cooler night certainly will be a cooler night certainly than the past couple of nights for many temperatures well down into some into single figures in some rural locations . most towns and rural locations. most towns and cities about 10 or 11 to start friday. now we will start off with a fair bit sunshine , with a fair bit of sunshine, certainly midlands, certainly over the midlands, south , much northeast south wales, much of northeast england too. elsewhere there'll be more mixture of sunshine be more of a mixture of sunshine and showers and through the day showers will develop more widely. i still suspect widely. but i still suspect a good chunk of the day will be dry, particularly for east anglia south east. anglia and the south east. the showers scattered , showers fairly well scattered, not but it not particularly heavy, but it will be a fairly wet and increasingly windy day across the far north of scotland and everywhere. cool for the everywhere. fairly cool for the end of august. high teens for most at best, saturday a most at best, saturday is a similar again. most at best, saturday is a similar again . yes, some similar story again. yes, some sunshine, of showers, sunshine, but plenty of showers, showers and saturday could be fairly heavy, quite slow moving in places with the risk of thunder as well. quite blustery across wales and across parts of wales and south—west england. another cool feeling staying cool all feeling day, staying cool all weekend. but after some heavy showers on saturday should turn a drier for most of us.
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners. we've got the telegraph now in according to ethical bank bosses , serial killers are better than politician ones. i actually think a few people might agree with this. >> bruce so this is banking bosses let serial killer ross west keep her account ethical. co—op bank let west stay a customer after she'd murdered ten women and girls . now, customer after she'd murdered ten women and girls. now, i'm not laughing at any of it, but when they did see bosses at the co—op, which has the slogan ethical then now and always has a wry smile, did come over my mouth and this is the review came after the bank was embroiled in a scandal when its former chamber sorry , chairman former chamber sorry, chairman paul flowers, a methodist
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minister who led the bank for three years sorry, was filmed buying and using illegal drugs, including crystal meth , crack including crystal meth, crack cocaine and ketamine that sounds like the corporate i was doing last night . like the corporate i was doing last night. i'm but. but you did it in an ethical way. he did it in an ethical way because you know what? he didn't have creepy eyes around eyes that followed you around the was a. he was the room. and he was a. he was a nice man. ehm, what i didn't understand was the reason that they this continue was they let this continue was because rose's daughter was the main person using the bank account. so i didn't understand why daughter didn't have why rose's daughter didn't have her account. yeah her own bank account. yeah >> i don't understand that >> yeah. i don't understand that ehheni >> yeah. i don't understand that either. i mean, france is the they've they've allowed rose west to keep her account. yeah de—banking nigel farage. and they've also declined services to, to feminist groups so it doesn't seem that they're actually ethical. they're just going along with whatever the fashionable thing, you know, whoever the fashionable fashionable people to put the boot into, whether it's gender critical feminists or nigel
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farage, they'll put the boot into them. well, you might not actually know this, leo. the reason she rose west was allowed to her account is because to keep her account is because she remain. she's pro she voted remain. she's pro trans and she has pronouns in her bio. so as a result of that rose, i mean , there was a couple rose, i mean, there was a couple of, you know, she, you look, she has a past, we all do. but now she's a reformed character and she's a reformed character and she is she's a good person , she is she's a good person, unlike nigel who is worse than a serial killer. and there's a heavy layer of irony there , just heavy layer of irony there, just in case anybody didn't pick up on that. we've got the times now and another mediocre male athlete is upset that isn't athlete is upset that he isn't being smash women's being allowed to smash women's sporting records. frances well, yes. this is to do with emily yes. so this is to do with emily bridges and emily bridges is a cyclist. and what emily bridges is and look , let's let's be is and look, let's let's be fair. british vogue named emily, one of the 25 powerhouse women, the only female athlete right in
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the only female athlete right in the british vogue, 25 powerhouse women was emily because she's a winner. and she started to reduce her test levels in 2021. she has been barred from taking part again , women, biological part again, women, biological women, female females , women, female females, basically. and this is incredibly transphobic. and i agree . why isn't emily allowed agree. why isn't emily allowed to make women's sports more interesting ? well, i think this interesting? well, i think this is i mean , it's ridiculous. you is i mean, it's ridiculous. you can identify why as a woman. fair enough. we'll use the pronouns , you know. great. we'll pronouns, you know. great. we'll be polite and all the rest of it. but you can identify as women. you can't identify as a female that's something female athlete. that's something else . that's that's not that's else. that's that's not that's not fair. well, it's obviously not fair. well, it's obviously not fair. well, it's obviously not fair. fair, mate. no. going through male puberty gives athletes incredible advantages. you get more muscle mass, you get stronger bones, it's easier , it's easier. it's easier to parallel park inside the stadium. yeah, there's a lot of advantages there. you know, she's you know, it's she's got logic, you know, it's all of these things, so all of these things, mate. so look, joke aside, it's
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look, look, joke aside, it's absolutely ridiculous . but, you absolutely ridiculous. but, you know, the more muscle mass, more bone , greater amount of bone bone, greater amount of bone density be bigger, stronger , density be bigger, stronger, quicker. it'sjust density be bigger, stronger, quicker. it's just ridic jealous that we're having these conversations. yeah. and to then say, oh look, this is, you know, transphobic and, i mean, come on, really , really. it's not on, really, really. it's not transphobic . on, really, really. it's not transphobic. i'm on, really, really. it's not transphobic . i'm absolutely transphobic. i'm absolutely happy to accept emily as a woman, but not as a female athlete. yeah, that's that's. there's just some lines where, you know, i'm sorry that it's such a sacrifice, but if you really wanted to be an athlete so much , stay as a male, compete so much, stay as a male, compete as a male, you can still compete . but just in the open category, which includes , you know, males which includes, you know, males and else to wants and whoever else wants to wants to compete. don't understand to compete. i don't understand why is some examples of why this is some examples of disgusting levels of prejudice . disgusting levels of prejudice. it's to me it's completely nonsensical . well, staying with nonsensical. well, staying with transphobia, we've got the male now and a common insult has been ruled transphobic , even though ruled transphobic, even though it's biologically accurate. bruce so this is the word that
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begins with w and ends in r. >> i don't think i'm allowed to say it. >> wagner yeah , kind of, yes. >> wagner yeah, kind of, yes. >> wagner yeah, kind of, yes. >> so it's same. yeah calling a transgendered woman a wagner yeah , i'm, you know what i mean ? >> actually 7 >> actually sounds worse than the. >> okay, fine. allegedly discrimination because the inqu discrimination because the insult commonly refers to men. the tribunal suggests. no, i'm not trying to be disgusting by a female friend that use that same word themselves . if they are, word themselves. if they are, shall we say , are trying to get shall we say, are trying to get off to sleep or having a nice time to relieve house. that kind of thing. but what they are saying here is that you are unable to use it. so this is to do with a what? miss fisher? amanda fisher was working at a bus company and someone had called her a w word . yes, a called her a w word. yes, a w there we go. ehm. and there's a
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whole host of other stuff where she felt she was bullied because she felt she was bullied because she was trans and someone was, you know, they kind of poked it higher. someone had driven a bus through the i don't know if she was on the road in another through the i don't know if she was buthe road in another through the i don't know if she was but someone in another through the i don't know if she was but someone had another through the i don't know if she was but someone had driven' bus, but someone had driven a bus, but someone had driven a bus very close to her. >> like a worse thing >> it seems like a worse thing to do than calling someone a word that begins words word that begins its words of violence. , violence. leo yeah, well, apparently so, because this tribunal that this, tribunal has ruled that this, this word, which as you say, i mean, i understood, i mean, it's often accompanied by a hand gesture. yes. so i mean, it does relate to the male male anatomy, right? but then when she was born, a male , so it's born, a male, so it's biologically accurate . it would biologically accurate. it would have, you know, she she could fulfil that motion. should she desire to. absolutely. but the really interesting thing about this case is that the judge ruled that, you know, that this didn't actually happen . what do didn't actually happen. what do you mean? so the judge actually said that . here we go. the said that. here we go. the incident had not actually occurred. oh, but you still ruled that if it had occurred? yeah it would have been
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transphobic. yeah, exactly. so it's you know , it's kind of like, you know, schrodinger's, know , schrodinger's, you know, schrodinger's, you know, schrodinger's insult. okay well, we've got the times now with a shocking example of sexism in the nhs. i mean, to be fair, it's not the worst thing the nhs has done this week. francis absolutely. so this is a health visitor win 66 discriminate sex discriminate in case after female boss told him to man up. so this is a man who you're laughing. it's disgraceful. this is sexist in the workplace. bruce right. take it seriously . bruce right. take it seriously. so this is a man who was working in a female dominated environment, qualified as a nurse, worked in the nhs for 20 years. i think the male ones are called doctors and as a result, he would say that he was being bullied by his boss at and gave numerous examples saying that he was constantly being told that he was the butt of the joke and she, his female boss told him to man up several times. he then started crying and then did he
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started crying and then did he start crying? oh, probably. i don't know. i was just being facetious . and then he sued and facetious. and then he sued and he won and he won . yeah. he won and he won. yeah. amazing. yeah. so ladies have a think about the way you talk to us because we've got feelings, too. bruce, do you think this is there being people are being too sensitive or do you think it's great to see this equality and a man actually being the victim of sexism ? sexism? >> yeah , i suppose. >> um, yeah, i suppose. obviously that's his lived experience, isn't it? so i can't speak for his feelings, but it's a bit like when guys go, oh, but i'm a red blooded male. yeah, well, just because, you know, i mean, i don't have pepto bismol going through veins, you going through my veins, you know, blood as know, i've got red blood as well, it's all kind of well, so it's all that kind of stuff. and just stuff. and you're just like, well, upset him, well, if that's what upset him, that's what upset him. yeah. >> that's what the tribunal >> and that's what the tribunal ruled anyway , the guardian now. ruled anyway, the guardian now. and apparently parents want more ruled anyway, the guardian now. and treading ly parents want more ruled anyway, the guardian now. and treading to parents want more ruled anyway, the guardian now. and treading to theirts want more ruled anyway, the guardian now. and treading to their children nore time reading to their children on what's the problem, francis? can't a book that can't they find a book that isn't about fetish sex? well, it's apparently it's 33% of them
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are actually quite unsure about reading. they lack confidence to reading. they lack confidence to read to their children . so look read to their children. so look . well, even in a kid's book. yeah, even in a picture of the dog. i know. yeah, even in a picture of the dog. i know . so, look, just stop dog. i know. so, look, just stop shaming the toughest. they're not the toughest books. no, they're not. spot the dog. the dog sat on the mat. if you can't read that, mate, give up. so, yeah, so basic hinckley. they. they want more time to read with them and they just feel slightly uncomfortable, unconfident . i uncomfortable, unconfident. i mean, there's not a great deal of going on in this story. i'm going to be honest. all right. >> but the thing is, i think they should have gone like, you know, child doesn't know know, your child doesn't know what's in the book, so you can make yeah that's true. i make it up. yeah that's true. i used my niece make it up. yeah that's true. i use(nephew. my niece make it up. yeah that's true. i use(nephew. i my niece make it up. yeah that's true. i use(nephew. i used my niece make it up. yeah that's true. i use(nephew. i used to |y niece make it up. yeah that's true. i use(nephew. i used to |y nithem and nephew. i used to tell them about and hamsters about rats, mice and hamsters and all that kind of thing and whatever. and cast in neighbours and know, we did, we did was and you know, we did, we did was on, we didn't need the text. no, the text out. yeah. freestyle
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your kids just want i would imagine some kind of parent bonding time and a laugh before they go to sleep. >> great advice there. anyway, that's part three. but that's it for part three. but coming final section, coming up in the final section, we've another benefit of we've got another benefit of climate james may being climate change. james may being fired for being a white man and mrs. back and badder than ever. see in two minutes .
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well come back to headliners. we've got the independent now and mrs. back doesn't sound like he's learned his lesson, though. frances no, it's almost like his . his behaviour is being incentivised by all the money he's making online. on. so tiktok star mrs. says society is out to get me as he's bailed over prank videos so he's on three counts of breaching a criminal criminal behaviour order but he's also now being
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accused of accused of engaging in further criminal activities . in further criminal activities. and one of the alleged place incidents took place when he visited the westfield centre in in stratford , which he's not in stratford, which he's not allowed to do so. but his excuse was he was unaware, he was unaware of the breach because he had not been given a map of the out of bounds area . yes, missy, out of bounds area. yes, missy, because you don't have google maps on your phone , you absolute maps on your phone, you absolute anyway . so there's a maps on your phone, you absolute anyway. so there's a big sign on it saying westfield. so you kind of know when you're in the westfield centre, but to me, this just explains to me why our society is absolute doomed, that you have this, this boy just going around committing these crimes and getting huge numbers of views online and then he gets given a platform and then we listen to him. are you a bit jealous because you've had to get your views doing get your views by doing interviews with jordan peterson and that? exactly. and stuff like that? exactly. well content ,
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well thought out content, instead into instead of just running into people's and stealing people's homes and stealing people's dogs. absolutely i should what i should have been doing pretending to be a dog doing is pretending to be a dog on a mcdonald's counter. 6 million views. yeah. and then i can go and interview missy and then get another 12 million doing that. and we're seeing it catch contagion. catch on as a social contagion. we just a couple of weeks we saw just a couple of weeks ago was the riots on ago there was the riots on oxford street where people mobbed shops . the mobbed sportswear shops. the bookshops were all right. but yeah, but yeah. rob jd sports and it was all organised on tiktok and social media. oh absolutely . and you know, and as absolutely. and you know, and as absolutely. and you know, and as a result of that, you know, people will see this and go, oh, look, guy is doing look, this guy is doing something. he's gaining notoriety , he's gaining money notoriety, he's gaining money for himself , notoriety, he's gaining money for himself, why don't i do that? and like you said, they're not i doubt they're to not going to. i doubt they're to going go in and start, you know , stealing because , stealing books because they can't . so they're going to can't read. so they're going to go to jd sports and steal trainers , but also not going to trainers, but also not going to steal father's day cards . steal father's day cards. anyway, metro now anyway, we've got the metro now . james says he was an early . james may says he was an early victim bruce yeah.
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victim of wokeness bruce yeah. >> so james may says he lost a huge job due to wokeness . >> so james may says he lost a huge job due to wokeness. he claimed wokeness cost him a job early in his career. the presenter , 60, was one of the presenter, 60, was one of the highest paid stars of television, and for two decades he was a host of top gear and then the grand tour. but now he's insisted he was dropped from a channel 4 motoring show for being a man. not for being a man. now, i'm not necessarily sure. again, this is his lived reality . i understand his lived reality. i understand that. but i'd listened to ruby wax audiobook and she'd said that, funnily enough, when she hit 50, the bbc wanted rid of her and then for years she hated louis theroux because . cause he louis theroux because. cause he was brought in because if you think it was before, she did a similar similar. but that was the when i was the whole thing. when i was listening i like, but listening to it, i was like, but yeah, you were trailblazer for yeah, you were a trailblazer for louis . and then louis theroux. and then apparently she went did apparently she went and did a podcast with him. it all podcast with him. it was all fine. i can't but think fine. i can't help but think that thought that maybe they just thought james, you know, because top gear its most recent gear now in its most recent incarnation, is . flintoff and incarnation, is. flintoff and whoever else. yeah and i'm
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thinking from friends. whoever else. yeah and i'm thinking from friends . yeah. thinking from friends. yeah. >> and the original top gear people , you know, james may, people, you know, james may, jeremy clarkson, they've gone and done the grand tour on. yes. >> yeah . which has been, i think >> yeah. which has been, i think i don't think that's any more as well. but is it maybe the case that he just wasn't that great? >> well, this is the thing. i mean, guess any any time i get mean, i guess any any time i get cancelled, always assume it's cancelled, i always assume it's because some sort of because of some sort of prejudice against me. you prejudice against me. have you been know if i have this week. don't know if i have this week. it's hard to because you've it's hard to tell because you've been cancelled . you only know been cancelled. you only know when you get offered something. but phone doesn't but no, when the phone doesn't ring from certain comedy ring anymore from certain comedy clubs. oh the comedy clubs. leo but, um, but look , i just feel but, um, but look, i just feel like i think we overuse this term woke and wokeness when there's certain things where it just doesn't apply. and because you didn't get a job or they decided to replace you, that doesn't mean that they're being woke. i believe him. i believe old james may's. anyway, we've got the times now with another benefit of climate change. it'll
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give excuse nap at give us an excuse to nap at work. exactly. so work. francis exactly. so australians in manual jobs will need to take a siesta, mate . so need to take a siesta, mate. so basically what it is quite action is the, the climate is going to get much hotter and in places which already has a warm climate , it means that they're climate, it means that they're going to have to take siestas dunng going to have to take siestas during the peak heat. so in australia they're not going to be able to work at certain times and so in scotland, when it gets to 11 c, yeah , everybody's got to 11 c, yeah, everybody's got to 11 c, yeah, everybody's got to go inside because that's the peak. no one works in scotland anymore. they just wait for a bail out from england probably. yeah probably shouldn't have done that joke. surrounded by two scots. oh, of course . you two scots. oh, of course. you both work. that's why you're in london. anyway. carry on. we've got the telegraph now reporting on a vegetable shortage. bruce, this feels like another hate crime against. oh, for goodness sakes. scotland. >> yes. the casual racism is just going down a storm. it's really funny , actually, because really funny, actually, because i was out for dinner of i was out for dinner ahead of white someone
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white glass night and someone didn't order this on their pizza because they weren't sure. so there is a waitrose are hit by a middle class vegetable shortage of artichokes. right. and um, this has been upsetting people because the demand for artichokes soared during the pandemic as shoppers were stuck at home to create mediterranean style meals such as ottolenghi's boiled version with pink peppercorn . alioli. peppercorn. alioli. >> you can't just do a tomato sauce and some spaghetti. no, no , no. >> or some sardines or , you >> or some sardines or, you know, a tuna and salad cream and sweetcorn or whatever. >> waitrose has really been suffering from . i shop at suffering from. i shop at waitrose just because the waitrose just because it's the nearest to me and nearest supermarket to me and quite often because doing quite often because you're doing a better quite often a lot better now. quite often the and the ready meals and the and also the ready meals and waitrose as i was waitrose aren't as good as i was always told. waitrose is the best thing anyway . we're going best thing anyway. we're going to have come of this. the to have to come out of this. the show over, let's to have to come out of this. the show another over, let's to have to come out of this. the showanotherquick�*, let's to have to come out of this. the show another quick look.et's to have to come out of this. the show another quick look at s take another quick look at friday's front daily friday's front pages. the daily mail chilling mail leads with putin's chilling taunt over his rival's mistakes. the sun has, with deepest
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sympathy . so sorry i killed the sun has, with deepest sympathy. so sorry i killed him. putin being sarcastic there. the guardian has us says bomb likely cause of prigozhin crash. the express leads with prime minister vast £4 billion spend on asylum is unacceptable . all on asylum is unacceptable. all the news has bomb blew up putin critics jet. he's a bit more than a critic and finally the daily star has curse of the spooky child and those were your front pages. and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, francis foster, bruce guest, francis foster, and bruce devlin. i'll back tomorrow at devlin. i'll be back tomorrow at 11 lewis schaffer and 11 pm. with lewis schaffer and paul if you're watching paul cox. and if you're watching at tuned for at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast by. >> looks like things are heating up. >> boxed boilers are proud sponsors of weather on gb news . evening. >> i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news a mixture of sunshine and showers to come on friday and a cooler feel for many, particularly across east anglia in the south east where it's been quite warm humid it's been quite warm and humid today we've a few
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today and we've seen a few thunderstorms as result. this thunderstorms as a result. this low pressure sitting across northern still northern scotland is still providing some heavy showers here and they'll keep going through any of those through the night. any of those showers left across the showers still left across the south—east are fading away now. so of england wales so much of england and wales will dry overnight and it will become dry overnight and it will become dry overnight and it will a cooler night certainly will be a cooler night certainly than couple of nights than the past couple of nights for many temperatures well down into figures in some into single figures in some rural . most towns and rural locations. most towns and cities about 10 or 11 to start friday. now we will start off with bit sunshine , with a fair bit of sunshine, certainly midlands, certainly over the midlands, south , much of northeast south wales, much of northeast england to elsewhere, there'll be more of a mixture of sunshine and and through the day and showers and through the day showers develop more showers will develop more widely. but i still suspect a good chunk the day will be good chunk of the day will be dry, east dry, particularly for east anglia south east. anglia and the south east. the showers scattered , showers fairly well scattered, not particularly but it not particularly heavy, but it will be a fairly wet and increasingly windy day across the of scotland and the far north of scotland and everywhere cool for everywhere fairly cool for the end august . everywhere fairly cool for the end august. high teens for end of august. high teens for most at best. saturday is a similar story again. yes, some sunshine, but plenty of showers. showers and saturday could be fairly heavy, quite slow moving
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showers and saturday could be faiplacesvy, quite slow moving showers and saturday could be faiplaces wherete slow moving showers and saturday could be faiplaces where the low moving showers and saturday could be faiplaces where the risk�*noving showers and saturday could be faiplaces where the risk of ving in places where the risk of thunder as well, quite blustery across parts of wales and south—west england. another cool feeling cool all feeling day staying cool all weekend. but after some heavy showers on saturday should turn a bit drier for most of us. >> looks like things are heating up. box boilers proud sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> last night's debate will see who won. we'll talk about the stunning number of views that donald trump got with his interview with tucker carlson on twitter or x or whatever we choose to call it these days . we choose to call it these days. we have exclusive uk sit down have an exclusive uk sit down interview with last night's big winner debate , vivek winner of the debate, vivek
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ramaswamy. we'll also talk about de—banking. isn't it funny ? rose de—banking. isn't it funny? rose west, the mass murderer keeps her account. nigel farage gets closed down. something wrong there? i think . but first, there? i think. but first, before all of that , let's get before all of that, let's get the news with ellie costello . the news with ellie costello. >> thanks, nigel. it's 701. i'm ellie costello in the newsroom . ellie costello in the newsroom. russia's president vladimir putin has sent his condolences to the family of the wagner group leader who was reportedly killed in a plane crash north of moscow yesterday . yevgeny moscow yesterday. yevgeny prigozhin was one of the ten people named on the jet's passenger list. mr putin described the mercenary boss as a talented businessman . a talented businessman. >> prigozhin i knew prigozhin for a very long time, since the early 1990s. >> he was a man with a complex destiny and he made serious
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mistakes in life. he achieved the results he needed both for himself and when i asked him for the common cause , as in these the common cause, as in these last months , he was a talented last months, he was a talented person , a talented businessman. person, a talented businessman. he worked not only in our country and worked with results, but also abroad in africa in particular. >> gb news understands the government is looking to block the former natwest chief executive's multi million pound payout. dame alison rose quit after it emerged she talked about nigel as finance bosses to about nigel as finance bosses to a journalist. her actions are being independently investigated and the backlog of asylum cases has hit a record high. more than 175,000 people were waiting for an initial decision on their application at the end of june. that's up 44% on last year. donald trump is due to surrender himself on charges of trying to overturn the result of the 2020
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